Aronson gained public recognition when he won an award in 1893 from the
Belgian government for the creation of the first non-toxic
match, winning 50,000 francs ($10,000 U.S. dollars). In 1897 he received a
U.S. patent for a match design (called the Wind-match) that would light in windy conditions or when wet. He continued working on his match designs including inventing the “Birds Eye” or “Kitchen” match that had a dual-tip design in 1903. This was an important safety improvement because friction matches of the day would sometimes light accidentally especially when stepped on or while in one’s pocket. He realized that placing a small friction ignition chemical on the tip instead of the entire match-head greatly limited accidental ignition. The same style of match is still in use today. Aronson continued his research on all-weather matches and received a U.S. patent in 1918 for a match that was praised by soldiers who were fighting in mud-filled trenches during
World War I. His proficiency with matches led to a U.S. patent for bomb fuses also used in
World War I, which he donated to the
U.S. Government for the duration of the war, earning his company the Distinguished Service Certificate from President
Woodrow Wilson and the
War Department. In 1910 Aronson received his first patent for a pocket
lighter which used a
flint material containing a mixture of
cerium and
iron. His design was a simple device that created a shower of sparks with the press of a finger, but there was no sustainable flame. He later produced the Pist-O-Liter which also only produced sparks. Within three years he received a patent for a “pyrophorous lighter” which was capable of producing and sustaining a flame by means of a steel-tipped wand fitted with a cloth-wick saturated in
petroleum ether. The next year, 1914, he was granted a design patent for the Bulldog striker lighter, which soon became a popular table lighter. In 1926 Aronson released a new "automatic operation" Banjo lighter, which offered both ignition and extinguishment in a single push. It was a great success, demand shortly exceeding supply, spurring Aronson to patent it and design other products around the invention, which were marketed under the
Ronson brand name. == Other work ==